Tim Hardaway played 13 seasons in the NBA. Known as the ""UTEP Two-Step,"" Hardaway was afive-time All-Star and five-time All-NBA player. A first-round draft pick by the Golden State Warriors in 1989, he was known for having one of the best crossovers in the game-one that is still replicated to this day. Rising to fame as a member of ""Run TMC"" along teammates Mitch Richmond and Chris Mullin, Hardaway is best known for his rivalry with the New York Knicks as a member of the Miami Heat. Considered one of the best point guards of his generation, he is currently a basketball analyst for FSI and was inducted into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in 2022. Jake Uitti'swork has appeared in Vanity Fair, the Guardian, Interview, the Nation, the Athletic, and numerous otherpublications. A Seattle-based writer, Jake has loved and followed the NBA since the early nineties. Once humorously dubbed ""the best under six-foot center in the country,"" his playing career didn't last past his high school days, but that's when writing took over. The co-author ofMuggsy,Earl the Twirl, and Banned,Killer Crossoveris his fourth NBA memoir. Uitti resides in Seattle, Washington, with his beautiful and brilliant wife Eva.
Praise for Tim Hardaway and Killer Crossover “Chicago Hall of Famer Tim Hardaway has done what only a few NBA players have done: he left his permanent mark on the game!” —Isiah Thomas, NBA Hall of Famer “My man Tim Hardaway was one of the toughest point guards I had to guard. The killer crossover was real!” —Muggsy Bogues, NBA icon “Tim Hardaway had great handles, a deadly jump shot and the best crossover dribble in the NBA. He also had the heart of a lion. But he was definitely one of the coolest guys you could ever meet. Absolutely an NBA Great.” —Shawn Kemp, six-time NBA All-Star “When I was a young assistant coach first in the NBA, Tim Hardaway taught me as much about NBA basketball, in particular pick and roll basketball, as any coach ever did.” —Stan Van Gundy, iconic NBA coach and broadcaster “Tim Hardaway was an excellent player. He didn’t have great length but he made up for it with his solid body and tenacity. He could play the point or the big guard spot. He could guard players bigger than him. On offense, he had great quickness and was always a threat to beat his defender off the dribble. His killer crossover was as good as there ever was. I had the pleasure of coaching him in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney (Australia), where we won gold.” —Rudy Tomjanovich, two-time NBA champion coach